A Ferrari Portofino and outlet covers that look like what a Ferrari owner would buy, except in solid gold or something. Ferrari didn’t say which car(s) would be electric, if it does make an electric car, and the Portofino is just for illustration. Images via Ferrari/The Home Depot

When looking at the qualities of a major company’s CEO, having consistent and confident ideas about the future is a good start. Fiat Chrysler and Ferrari CEO Sergio Marchionne doesn’t have that. He’s more like a Magic 8-Ball that gives a different answer about his company’s direction every time someone asks.

The newest addition to Ferrari’s future, essentially decided by shaking up a dice cube of fortunes and spitting one out, is that Ferrari could go electric one day. Marchionne, an avid hater of electric cars who once couldn’t bear the thought of an electric Ferrari, told Bloombergif the all-electric trend hits supercars, Ferrari will be the first to build one.

What? Is someone messing with Marchionne’s horoscopes and fortune cookies for the fun of it?

No. He’s just really this indecisive, and really this adamant to not follow the popular car trends until he has to. The evolution of Marchionne’s views on electric Ferraris, and EVs in general, went like this over the past few years:

May 21, 2014: “If you are considering buying a [Fiat] 500e [electric car], I hope you don’t buy it, because every time I sell one it costs me $14,000.”

March 4, 2016: “With Ferrari, [an electric car]’s almost an obscene concept.” Marchionne added that there will never be an electric Ferrari because engine noise is so important to the experience of driving one.

Jan. 16, 2018, via Bloomberg: “If there is an electric supercar to be built, then Ferrari will be the first. People are amazed at what Tesla did with a supercar: I’m not trying to minimize what Elon did but I think it’s doable by all of us. ... Going from [Ferrari’s hybrid plans] to an electric is easy.”

Former Ferrari boss Luca di Montezemolo said in 2013 that there would be no electric Ferraris while he was around, so at least Marchionne kept with the same idea for a few years. Di Montezemolo left in 2014, saying the company was “now American.” He also said a Ferrari is “like a beautiful woman; you must desire her, you must wait for her,” so, uh, bye dude.

But electric vehicles aren’t the only popular automotive trend Marchionne has no idea what he wants to do about. The Ferrari SUV that’s totally, actually, really happening now wasn’t always his intent, despite crossovers and SUVs being the quickest and easiest way to make stacks of cash in car sales right now.

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Here, let Marchionne lead you through his zig-zagging ideas:

Oct. 3, 2014: “[Ferrari will continue] to make two-door sports cars, not SUVs or four-door cars.”

Feb. 2, 2016: “You have to shoot me [before Ferrari will make an SUV to boost demand].”

Aug. 3, 2017: “[A Ferrari SUV] will probably happen but it will happen in Ferrari’s style. That space is too big and too inviting and we have a lot of our customers who will be more than willing to drive a Ferrari-branded vehicle that has that [kind] of utilitarian objective.” Marchionne said “you have to shoot me first” before Ferrari designs an SUV similar to Bentley, BMW or Porsche. (He should probably stop saying this, for his own safety.)

Oct. 9, 2017: “We’re dead serious about [building a Ferrari SUV]. We need to learn how to master this whole new relationship between exclusivity and scarcity of product, then we’re going to balance this desire to grow with a widening of the product portfolio.” Marchionne, however, does not call it an SUV. He and the company call it an “FUV,” for “Ferrari utility vehicle,” because they’re too weak to admit they do, eventually, give into the trends.

Jan. 17, 2017: “[The SUV] will look like whatever a Ferrari utility vehicle needs to look like. But it has to drive like a Ferrari. So far the fastest SUV belongs to Alfa [Stelvio Quadrifoglio] and I don’t think Ferrari fears Alfa.”

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Marchionne said the Ferrari SUV, once a blasphemous concept that would never come to life, will probably hit the market by the end of 2019 or beginning of 2020. He told Auto Expresshe saw the SUV while in Europe recently, which he said is just a mock-up body for now but looks “good.”

With Ferrari eventually conforming to the popular, money-printing car trends, one has to wonder what Marchionne will do about self-driving technology and autonomous Ferraris. After all, it doesn’t seem right to mix such a driver-oriented car brand with technology that takes away the human driving.